Райан Уэстфилд - Finding Shelter

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Finding Shelter: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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SURVIVING NEVER GETS EASY.
With a child on the way, Max makes the toughest decision he’s ever made. He leaves home. And now he doesn’t know if he’ll make it back.
Without proper medical care, Mandy hopes that she’ll deliver her baby without complications.
When her daughter goes missing, Georgia must leave camp once again. She has the courage and determination to find her, but she doesn’t even know which direction to head in.
Finding Shelter is book 8 of The EMP, a post-apocalyptic survival thriller series. It deals with real people fighting for their survival every inch of the way.

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Nothing had changed since the EMP.

Before the EMP, Wilson had been a high-powered lawyer. He’d always fought the good fight. Pro bono cases, and things he really believed in were his specialty.

He’d been the sort of lawyer who’d made half a million a year easy, and that was with him not even chasing the money the way plenty of his colleagues did.

He’d been respected as lawyer. Very respected. Colleagues constantly consulted him, and international organizations had always been pestering him to give talks at conferences.

He’d always showed up at the conferences in his old scuffed shoes and wrinkled suits. As far as Wilson was concerned, his job required a suit, and that was as far as he was obligated to take it. For him, the job he was doing was more important than his appearance. Everyone already recognized his talents.

The post EMP world was no different. After Wilson had gotten hooked up with Grant, it hadn’t taken long for others to recognize his talents. Of course, the work here was quite a bit different than it had been before the EMP. But the ideas were the same. The requirements were similar. Organizational skills were crucial. As were people skills.

The way it stood now, Wilson was something like the personal secretary to Grant, the enigmatic and sometimes mysterious leader of the military camp.

He was nothing like a secretary in the pre-EMP sense of the world. He didn’t do much paper shuffling or filing. There were no phones to answer, although sometimes walkie-talkies and various types of radios were used, especially for certain missions.

Wilson’s own understanding of Grant was still growing. And now he understood that, if anything, Grant was really more of a politician than anything else. Well, a politician and a thinker as well.

Not many others understood Grant as well as Wilson. And that was because no one had as much personal contact with Grant as Wilson did.

It was Wilson who delivered Grant the daily briefs. It was Wilson who acted as the liaison between Grant and the rest of the militia camp. It was Wilson who plotted with Grant late into the night, trying to find the solution to some particularly difficult organizational problem.

Wilson truly believed in Grant and his mission. He wouldn’t have done it if he hadn’t.

If Wilson didn’t care about restoring order to the country, he would have been off doing something else. Most likely trying to carve out a comfortable lifestyle for himself. There were plenty of others doing it among the wreckage of the country. There were plenty of others who were just starting to get comfortable. Wilson got reports on them all the time.

Wilson couldn’t have done what Grant did. There was just no way. Grant had that charisma. He could walk out of his tent right now and people would just start following him around. Trying to talk to him. Trying to understand what he was thinking.

Sure, a lot of that had to do with the fact that there wasn’t a single person in the camp who didn’t recognize Grant on sight. But Wilson suspected that it was just who Grant was. He’d always been like that. Even before starting the camp. Just one of those magnetic people. No matter what they did, people were interested. No matter what they said, people listened.

Fortunately, Grant happened to have good ideas. Brilliant ideas.

Wilson was as fully committed to them as Grant was.

Bringing back order to the US? Completely squashing the incredible chaos and violence that had wrecked the nation since the EMP? It almost sounded too good to be true.

But that’s where the plan came in.

It was systematic.

It was novel.

It was unique.

It was simple.

It was brilliant, no matter which way you looked at it.

A sudden noise outside Wilson’s tent door interrupted his train of thinking.

It was someone clearing their throat. There wasn’t any way to really knock on a flimsy tent door, so a lot of the men and women would clear their throats instead.

For some reason, the noise had always annoyed Wilson.

“What is it?” said Wilson, his voice clearly conveying his annoyance.

“Sorry to interrupt, sir,” said the man, without continuing. Wilson didn’t immediately recognize the voice.

“Just get on with it. Come on in.”

The tent flap moved aside, and a short, stocky man entered. Wilson recognized his face, but he couldn’t recall his name at the moment.

The man entered awkwardly and moved to where he stood in front of Wilson’s table.

Apparently, he saw no need to state his name.

Wilson glared at the man. “Well,” he said. “Spit it out. What is it?”

“Ah, yes,” sputtered the man, who was apparently nervous as well as awkward. He moved his mouth around for a few moments awkwardly, without any sound coming out. Finally, something seemed to spark in his eye, and he spit it all out. “One of the eastern outposts picked up a man,” he said. “They told me to report it to you.”

“Picked up a man?” said Wilson. “Well, that’s hardly news. What was he doing? Why was he picked up?”

“He’d heard about the movement, sir. He’d heard about Grant. He wanted to join up.”

“So?” said Wilson, growing more annoyed by the minute. “I don’t see how any of this is news. We have new recruits coming in every day. They’ve heard the news. They’ve heard about what we’re doing, either from gossip or from the fliers. Why wasn’t he taken to the barracks for new recruits? Why are you telling me about this all?”

“He refused to go, sir.”

“Refused to go?”

“He’s stubborn, sir. Wanted to talk to Grant himself.”

Wilson let out a dry laugh. Grant wasn’t known for giving audiences to complete unknowns. Especially not people picked up by an outpost or a patrol. “I don’t think that’s going to happen,” said Wilson.

“Well, sir, he’s making things quite difficult.”

“Is he now?”

The man nodded. There was fear in his eyes, which were darting around nervously. Fear that wasn’t just for Wilson and his position. Was it fear for this audacious stranger?

“Send him in. I’ll talk to him.”

The man nodded and stepped once again through the tent flap.

Wilson sighed as he watched the man go. This, unfortunately, was a large part of his job. He had to smooth out the wrinkles in the camp so that Grant could occupy himself with more important things.

In mere moments, the man returned, this time with another man. Had he been standing outside the tent door all this time?

It was all highly irregular. A new recruit allowed to go as he pleased throughout the camp, waiting outside Wilson’s office.

Wilson studied the man. He walked with a slight limp. He was a little taller than average, and of medium build. Carried some muscle, but not a lot. Fairly thin, as most people were these days.

There was an intense look on his face. At least a week’s worth of thick stubble.

There was an intense intelligence in his eyes. An intelligence that Wilson didn’t see often.

The man carried himself like he was someone. Like he didn’t have anything to prove.

He had a commanding presence.

In a way, he reminded Wilson of Grant.

But there was no one like Grant except Grant himself.

“Name?” said Wilson, deciding to discuss the irregularities later.

“Max,” said the man.

“We go by last names here, generally.”

“Let’s just leave it at Max. Are you Grant?”

“Nope,” said Wilson. “But I’m as close as you’re going to get to Grant today. You’re lucky to be talking to me.”

“Well,” said Max. “That’s fine. I just wasn’t getting anywhere with your lackey here.” He nodded his head to indicate the nameless man who’d brought Max in. “I knew I needed to move up the chain of command.”

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